The Dallas post. (Dallas, Pa.) 19??-200?, August 03, 1934, Image 5

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THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1934.
PAGE FIVE
Tells Problems
Schools Face To
Meet New Needs
Cost Reduction : Demanded
While Enrollment Grows
~ Steadily
Harrisburg, Aug. 3—Changing con-
ditions bring new responsibilities to be
met by the public schools in the face
of ever-growing demands for economy,
Dr. James N. Rule, Superintendent of"
of Public Instruction, said today in de-
scribing the job ahead - in pulling the
schools through the depression and
preparing for the future.
The Department of Public Instruc-
tion has announced a suggested pro-|
gram of school recovery. One of its
main features is reconstruction of the
instructional program for ,schools of
the future. The task of the schools is
described as tremendous for they must
serve the varying needs of increasing
numbers mow demanding education,
without adequate equipment, text
books and supplies, The statement/con-
tinues:
‘Airmail Train’ Ready for Test Hop
Shortly after this test demonstration at Elmira, N. Y., in which
and Washington.
to which its mail is addressed.
one plane towed several gliders,
proved successful, it was announced that an ‘air train,” comprising a ‘locomotive’ biplane and
three glider ‘‘cars,” wouid carry mail in a trial flight from New York to Philadelphia, Baltimore,
The gliders are towed in the fan formation pictured above, and not in line, each
being hitched by separate rope to the “locomotive,” and each being “cut loose” as it reaches the city
week.
“The schools of Pennsylvania are
rendering outstanding service in;
making for improved living conditions, |=
in raising the standards of literacy, in
training for vocations, in the develop-/
ment of sound citizenship, and in pro-
viding for future welfare.
Criticisms
“Many of the criticisms of the school
are based on some single unsatisfac-
tory condition. The best of our present
civilization, largely the result of the
work of education, justifies our faith
in what the schools can do. This is
shown by the many fine)communities
developed as the result of sound edu-
cational enterprises. Communities de-
teriorate rapidly without the advan-|
tages of education.
“The school cannot function properly
minister to the needs of growing, alert |
and active young minds.
“If the needs of youth are to be ser-
ved, the program must be adequate
from the standpoint of both general
and vocational training. Properly or-
ganized schools can contribute much |
in the war against crime and the build-
ing of better communities.
“The schools must be subject to
change and must go forward with ad-
vances in agriculture, commerce, and
industry. Any attitude of self-satisfac- |
tion on the part of the schools should |
be resisted both by educators and lay- |
men,
“People of Pennsylvania have de-
monstrated their faith in public edu-
cation. They realize that without
schools there would be no provision for
fitting youth for activities in which
they are expected to take part.
“Today 2,000,00 school children and |
the thousands of youths, out of school, |
unemployed, look to education, and to]
the friends of education for help and a
way out.”
How Long Texas |
Was Republic
On March 2, 1836, Texas proclaimed
her independence, and maintained it
when Gen. Sam. Houston's army de-
feated Santa Anna at the head of
1,500 troops in the battle of San Jacin-
to, April 21, 1836. In 1837, the United
States, England, France and Belgium
recognized the new government and
Texas remained independent until an-
nexed by the United States on Decem-
ber 29, 1945
How Much Heaviest
: Horses
REY _&
Veigh
Records of the heaviest horses are
very difficult to obtain. The Depart-
ment of Agriculture says that one of
the heaviest horses on record weighed
a little more than 3,600 pounds.
—— ei Qe.
Great Minds
Great minds are easy in prosperity
and quiet in adversity .
sma —
THEATRE - - At
—KINGSTON——-
The Governor Says
<
As I have said times without num- facts.
ber, nobody wants an extra session of For example, I get many letters urg-
the Legislature—least of all myself I ing me to take money from the roads
have plenty of trouble without that. yor polit. But uate tos i
So “should say so, and it hasn't said so yet,
But however little you and I want an tp, ios be illegal. No A
extra session, if all our efforts to Dre- officer of the Government is going to
vent it should fail, there might have t0 take the risk of spending the State's
be one after all. money illegally.
In any case, you may be sure of this: { Moreover, even if it were legally pos-
I shall not call an extra session unless |Sible to take motor fund money for re-
the Federal Relief Administration in- |lief, that would merely be taking mon-
sists that Pennsylvania must take ac- |8Y out of one relief pocket and putting
tion that only an extra session can |it In another relief pocket, for our road
take. 3 | program is the greatest single relief
5 WA . _|project in the State. All the men who
The Federal Relief Administration | wore on the roads by the day are put
has given notice that Federal contri- (on the job by Federal State employ-
butions to Pennsylvania relief after| ment offices. The spénding of road
August will depend on what action money for direct relief instead of for
Pennsylvania takes to raise relief mon- work relief on the roads would merely
ey herself, It demands a definite official i throw thousands of additional families |
commitment from the Commonwealth on direct relief
of Pennsylvania. Only the Legislature |
can make such a commitment. Hence, 1 undertook before any other Governor
although not in so. many words, the jn America, I have been forced to take
Federal Relief Administration asks | Pennsylvania's case directly to the
that a special session be called. White House. It has only been through
If the Federal! Government should the intervention of the President that
continue to insist, I shall be forced to|we have gotten as much help as we
call a special session, for I can not ac- | have.
cept, and you would not ‘want me to I repeat that I shall not call a special
accept, the responsibility of starving a|session until every means has been ex-
million helpless children, women, and |nausted in the fight to have the Fede-
men. Jeol Government continue to help the
An extra session would cost a lot of [taxpayers of Pennsylvania as gener-
money. That is why I have announced |ously as it has helped them for the last
that if I have to call it, I will do my few months, when it has carried the
best to see that the taxpayers get their {whole load. That ought to go on until
money's worth out of it in other ways |the next regular session can deal with
besides unemployment relief. I mean, [the problem of caring for the unems=-
for example, reduction of local and real [ployed in Pennsylvania.
estate taxation, doing away with the;
sweatshop, and so on
All the members of the House and
In the battle for Federal help, which |
How Salmon Leap Falls
The bureau of fisheries says that a
‘salmon in attempting to ascend an ab-
'solutely perpendicular fall will leap at
the fall from a much broader angle
and probably touch the water at about
two-thirds of the heights from there.
If the fall is not too high, the fish can
reach the top by energetic swimming.
It could not ascend a 15-foot fall all
the way from the bottom. It is possi-
ble that if the pool at the foot of a 15
foot fall were deep enough for a good
start, a salmon might succeed in
mounting it.
A Score For Scotland
The longest tunnel in the world is
that running for 15 miles through Ben
Nevis, Scotland. It is really a pipe
line for an electricity scheme.
How Old Rifles Were Loaded
In loading with the old style of cart-
ridge for muzzle-loading rifles before
ithe Civil war, the paper over the pow-
{der was bitten or twisted off, and the
{powder poured in, the bullet being then
inserted and rammed home. [In the
first breech-loaders, similar cartridges
{were used but trouble developed
{through the escape of gas from the
breech to the mechanism and the met-
allic cartridge was developed to obvi-
ate this difficulty.
| Uruguay Is Progressive
| Uruguay is progressive, despite its
smallness. Sixty-six per cent of its
72,000 square miles is devoted to stock
farms.
errs EY Qe,
Mummies Well Preserved
Mummies of an ancient Indian people
found in Texas are very well preserved.
half the members of the Senate are .
facing an election in November and) |
most of them have pledged themselves
to oppose new taxation of any kind.
We all know too, that in 1933 Penn-
sylvania contributed practically half of
|the amount spent for relief in the State
and that while Pennsylvania taxpayers
| were providing these huge sums, the
taxpayers in many other states were
escaping nearly all relief taxation.
While the Federal Government was
paying half of the Pennsylvania relief
load, it was paying more than 75 per
cent in many other states, an average
of 95 per cent in another large group
of states, and in at least one state it
was paying the whole bill.
The reason we have been able to
avoid a special session so far is that
we have been able to impress the Fed-
eral authorities with the fairness of
Pennsylvania's plea for. Federal help.
Compared with many other states we
have done far more than our share.
There has been a great deal of loose!
talk as to what is possible and practi-
cal in providing relief. Most of it comes
from organizations or from people who
either don’t know anything about the
facts or wilfully misrepresent those
Kingston Corners
Gary Cooper
Marion Davies
—In—
“OPERATOR
FRI. - SAT.
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| 13”
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Janet Gaynor
Charles Farrell
Tn
“CHANGE OF
HEART”
{
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MON. - TUES.
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A Trust Fund
of your own for as little as $10
ple in operation and management,
off this country’s oldest and most
America’s leading corporations.
vide:
1. Retirement at a certain age.
2. Education for your children.
5_ Protection to your fam
6. It can be liquid
If Interested, Call Yo
You may secure for yourself all the advantages. of a trust fund
Capital Savings Plan offers you today—a trust fund so basically sim-.
tails, and cares that you simply can’t ignore it.
You are setting aside a fund managed and watched over by one
your money begins at once to share in the earning power of 46 of
You have the same benefits that, until
recently, were available only to large investors.
a fund for your own use in later years—a fund, for instance to pro-
CAPITAL SAVINGS PLAN, Inc.
G. Harold Wagner
Representative
of Your Own
a, month. That is precisely what
and so free from all worries, de-
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COPYRIGHT W.N.U, SE
RVICE
You are accumulating
3. Ownership of your home.
4. An interest in your business.
ily in case of your death.
ated at any time.
ur Representative Ot
ECAUSE his stories are not often available
> for newspaper publication, we are par-
ticularly pleased to be able to present to our
readers this novel of the West by America's
most popular writer of love and adventure tales.
READ THIS ENGROSSING STORY AS IT
APPEARS SERIALLY IN THIS PAPER
| The Dallas Post Inc.
-Beaumont-
Mrs. Olive Bartlett was removed to |
the General Hospital, one day this
She is in a critical condition.
® * *
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hadsall of
South Eaton, spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. J. H. Hadsall.
. . .
Dora Anwyl is a patient in the hos-
pital at Binghamton, where she is be-
ing treated for spinal trouble_
Malcolm Goodwin and Leroy Loomis
returned home on Saturday, from
Camp Muir, Annsvalle, Pa.
kok
Saturday evening our regular Grange
meeting night, Grange will be held in
the form of a lawn social. Business
session will be held in the hall after
which all members will enjoy an even- |
ing of entertainment on the lawn, also
a lunch ‘will be served. Each member
is requested to bring sandwiches or
cake.
EI
About 50 friends and relatives gath-
ered at the home of John Downs, on
Sunday to help him celebrate his birth-
day. ¢
: : i
George Hunt, who is suffering with
blood poison was taken to the Nanti-
coke State Hospital, on Wednesday.
His condition’ is critical.
* kk
Quite a large number of families
from this place spent the past week
vacationing at Atlantic City.
sk
Mr. and Mrs. Hudson Sherman and
Loses 200 Teeth
It you're afraid to go to the
dentist, think of Martha Larson,
above, 16-year-old Kansas City,
Mo., girl, who just had 200 teeth
pulled -Miss Larson still had a
normal set of teeth left when the
others, most of them about the
size of a grain of rice, had been
extracted. .
family, who have been touring through
the middle west and - visiting the
World’s Fair, have returned home.
MOST AMAZING PROOF
EVER KNOWN OF EXTRA
TRACTION AND NON-SKID
SAFETY oo o oo
Uep...uvp...UP
os « to 14,000 feet above
sea-level! Skirting yavning
chasms, tearing aroun
181 treacherous turns at
breath-taking speeds,
daredevil drivers fight
their way up, grinding,
pounding, swaying! In the
annual Pike’s Peak Race,
where a slip means death,
Firestone High Speed Tires
were on the winning car.
Surely this is the most
amazing proof ever known
of Extra Traction—Non-Skid
Safety—and Dependability.
The new Firestone High
Speed Tires for 1934 have
the toughest, longest wearing
tread Firestone has ever
made. They have a wider
tread of flatter contour,
deeper non-skid, more and
tougher rubber, giving you
more than 50% longer
non-skid mileage.
Every cotton fiber inside
every cord is soaked and
coated with Extra Rubber
= eight additional pounds
absorbed by every 100
ounds of cotton cords. This
is Gum-Dipping, the Firestone
patented process that
provides extra Blowout
Protection..
50%
LONGER NON-SKID
MILEAGE
Triple Guarantee
—for Life Against All
Speed Tires for 1934.
HONOR ROLL
FIRESTONE
HIGH SPEED TIRES
For seven consecutive years
have been on the winning cars
in thedaring Pike’s Peak climb
where a slip meant death.
THIS MEANS NON-SKID SAFETY
AND TRACTION
*For fifteen consecutive years
have been on the winning cars
in the 500-mile Indienapolis
Race.
THIS MEANS BLOWOUT PROTECTION
*For three consecutive years
have been on the 131 buses of
the Washington (D.C.)
Railway and Electric Company -
covering 11,357,810 bus miles
without one minute’s delay
due to tire trouble.
THIS MEANS DEPENDABILITY
AND ECONOMY
% Were on the Neiman Motors’
. Ford V-8 Truck that made a
new coast-to-coast record of
67 hours, 45 minutes, 30
seconds actual running time.
THIS MEANS ENDURANCE
Remember — with every Firestone Tire you get the
~—for Unequaled Performance Records
Defects
—for 12 Months Against All Road Hazards*
(* Six Months in Commercial Service)
Call on the nearest Firestone Service Dealer or Service
Store today and equip your car with the new Firestone High
FIRESTONE CENTURY PROGRESS TIRE “£275
REDUCED PRICES FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY sent
SIZE OLDPRICE | * NEW PRICE [YOU SAVE ON [YOU SAVE ON THE OUTSTANDING
44021, ... $5.75 | $ 90 | $3.60 VALUE IN THE
4.50-21 ..., 6.30 1.01 4.04 LOW-PRICED FIELD
47509... 6.70 | 1.08 | 4.32 : :
5.0019... 7.20 | 114 | 4.56. Firestone
5.25.18... 8.00 | 1.27 08 || sueaine H-
5.5017 ... 8.75 | 140 | 5.60 [swan 64.48
6.0019 £0. 12.45 | 2.02 | 808 | iRy————/ 490
7.00-20 &.p. 17.10 | 2.73 |10.92 30x3% 3.68
OTHER SIZES PROPORTIONATELY LOW "OTHER HIE PROPORTIONATELY LOW _|
are Made at the Firestone
fl Factory and Exhibition
Building, World’s Fair
MOST MILES
OLIVER'S
Dallas,
See how Firestone 5] / Listen to the Voice of Firestone
®
=Featuring Gladys Swarthout
=Fver onday Night over
N.B.C.=WEAF Network
TERN
PER OLLAR
GARAGE
Penna.